The Skills Check is a short survey which should take you no more than 3 minutes to complete. Once you have completed the Skills Check we provide you with a personal learning plan targeted to your personal study needs and goals.

Essays

Many assignments need to be written in the form of an essay. The structure of essay-style assignments is very open but generally includes an introduction, a main body and a conclusion.

Section of essay

Purpose of section

Title

Write the full question (title) at the top of your assignment. It will contain keywords (known as content and process words).
See the 'Understanding the question' webpage for these.

Introduction

A paragraph or two to define key terms and themes and indicate how you intend to address the question.

Main body

A series of paragraphs written in full sentences that include specific arguments relating to your answer.
It’s vital to include evidence and references to support your arguments.

Conclusions

A short section to summarise main points and findings.
Try to focus on the question but avoid repeating what you wrote in the introduction.

References

A list of sources (including module materials) that are mentioned in the essay.

Introductions

An introduction provides your reader with an overview of what your essay will cover and what you want to say. Essays introductions should

set out the aims of the assignment and signpost how your argument will unfold

introduce the issue and give any essential background information
including a brief description of the major debates that lie behind the question

define the key words and terms

be between 5% and 10% of the total word count.

Some students prefer to write the introduction at an early stage, others save it for when they have almost completed the assignment.
If you write it early, don't allow it to constrain what you want to write. It's a good idea to check and revise the introduction after the first draft.

The body of your essay

The main body of your essay should present your case. Each main point should have its own paragraph.
You should use evidence to support the arguments you make in this section, referencing your sources appropriately.

You should use evidence to support and challenge the issues you cover in this section, referencing your sources appropriately.

You can deal with the issues in a way that seems appropriate to you. You can choose to

deal with all of the supporting and all of the challenging evidence separately

take each issue in turn, describing and evaluating it before moving on to the next issue

describe all the issues first before moving on to your evaluation of them.

How to order your arguments

Although you will need to clearly describe the issues related to the essay title (e.g. concepts and theoretical positions), you are expected to go further than mere description. An essay question might expect you to take one of the following approaches.

Make an argument by examining competing positions.
This type of essay requires you to make a balanced and well-argued case for the strength of one position over another.

Present an unbiased discussion.
You might do this by comparing and contrasting things (such as arguments put forward by individual scholars).

Explain something in a discursive way. To explore all the elements involved in a particular concept or theory in an even-handed way.

In all cases, you will be expected to

clearly describe what your essay is trying to do and define any essential terms

present an argument that is balanced

base any conclusions you draw on evidence

present evidence using references to the original published work.

Conclusion

Your conclusion should sum up how your essay has answered the title. It should reinforce your introduction and include a reference to the wording of the title.

If your essay has presented evidence or data, ensure that the conclusions you draw are valid in the light of that evidence and data. Draw your conclusions cautiously: use phrases such as 'the evidence suggests that ...', or 'one interpretation is that ...' rather than 'this proves that ...'.

Your conclusion should

summarise the key elements of your argument clearly and concisely

demonstrate how you've answered the question

perhaps suggest what needs to be considered in the future.

It should not

include any new arguments ideas or examples

be too long. For an assignment of fewer than 1,500 words a conclusion of 50-100 words is probably enough

repeat examples, phrases or sentences from the main body of your essay.

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